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1.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,125(6):1303-1312
CENP-E is a kinesin-like protein that binds to kinetochores through the early stages of mitosis, but after initiation of anaphase, it relocalizes to the overlapping microtubules in the midzone, ultimately concentration in the developing midbody. By immunoblotting of cells separated at various positions in the cell cycle using centrifugal elutriation, we show that CENP-E levels increase progressively across the cycle peaking at approximately 22,000 molecules/cell early in mitosis, followed by an abrupt (> 10 fold) loss at the end of mitosis. Pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine reveals that beyond a twofold increase in synthesis between G1 and G2, interphase accumulation results primarily from stabilization of CENP-E during S and G2. Despite localizing in the midbody during normal cell division, CENP-E loss at the end of mitosis is independent of cytokinesis, since complete blockage of division with cytochalasin has no affect on CENP-E loss at the M/G1 transition. Thus, like mitotic cyclins, CENP-E accumulation peaks before cell division, and it is specifically degraded at the end of mitosis. However, CENP-E degradation kinetically follows proteolysis of cyclin B in anaphase. Combined with cyclin A destruction before the end of metaphase, degradation of as yet unidentified components at the metaphase/anaphase transition, and cyclin B degradation at or after the anaphase transition, CENP-E destruction defines a fourth point in a mitotic cascade of timed proteolysis.  相似文献   

2.
Exit from mitosis requires the proteolytic degradation of mitotic cyclins, which is instigated by the APC/C ubiquitin ligase. The coincidence of mitotic cyclin B1 degradation with the onset of anaphase intuitively suggested a requirement of cyclin degradation for sister chromatid separation. While this hypothesis has originally been refuted, evidence that cyclin B1 degradation is required for anaphase during meiosis has been obtained, while its requirement for anaphase during mitosis is still more controversial. By studying human cells engineered to express non-degradable cyclin B1, we have recently shown that stable cyclin B1 affects progression through mitosis at various steps in a dose-dependent manner. These experiments suggest that controlled exit from mitosis might involve CDK activity thresholds for important late mitotic events, such as the onset of anaphase, formation of the spindle midzone, the onset of cytokinesis, cellular abscission and chromosome decondensation.  相似文献   

3.
Cell growth prior to cell division is restricted by the activity of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1)/cyclin B1 complexes. Recently, we identified that the death-effector domain (DED) containing protein, DEDD, acts as a novel inhibitor of mitotic Cdk1/cyclin B1, influencing cell size. Like cyclin B1, DEDD protein levels specifically peak during the G2/M phase. In the nucleus, DEDD associates with Cdk1/cyclin B1 complexes, via direct binding to cyclin B1, and reduces their function. In agreement, kinase activity of nuclear Cdk1/cyclin B1 in DEDD-null (DEDD-/-) embryonic fibroblasts is increased compared to that in DEDD+/+ cells. This accelerates mitotic progression in DEDD-/- cells, with a shortened G2/M phase, reduced rRNA, and diminished cell volume. Likewise, DEDD-/- mice show decreased body and organ weights relative to DEDD+/+ mice. Interestingly, the DED domain is not involved in the association of DEDD with Cdk1/cyclin B1, but is indispensable for the cell sizing function of DEDD. Together, in addition to the well-established machinery for activation of Cdk1 through dephosphorylation of its inhibitory-residues, we propose a novel mechanism for impeditive regulation of mitotic Cdk1/cyclin B1 mediated by DEDD within the nucleus, which allows sufficient cell growth prior to cell division.  相似文献   

4.
Megakaryocytes (MKs) develop from diploid progenitor cells via successive rounds of DNA synthesis in the absence of cell division, a process termed endomitosis (EnM). While the mechanism underlying EnM is not known, studies in yeast and leukemic cell lines have suggested that it may be due to reduced levels of cyclin B1 or cdc2, leading to a decrease in mitotic kinase activity. Using flow cytometry to study EnM highly purified marrow-derived MK precursors, we found that: (1) on average, 36% of 8N-32N MKs expressed abundant cyclin B during G2/M. The percentage of cells in G2/M decreased in >64N MKs, suggesting the limit of EnM, (2) the level of cyclin B per G2/M MK increased linearly with ploidy, (3) cyclin B expression oscillated normally in polyploid MKs, (4) MPM-2, a phosphoepitope created by the action of mitotic kinases and specific to M-phase cells, was expressed in a significant fraction of polyploid MKs, and (5) there was an apparent increase of cyclin B in G1-phase in polyploid MKs. This study provides the first qualitative kinetic data regarding the cell cycle status of MKs within individual ploidy classes. It also demonstrates the feasibility of using anti-cyclin B antibody and flow cytometry to resolve G1 from G2/M populations in polyploid MKs. Finally, these findings establish that neither a relative nor absolute deficiency of mitotic kinase components is responsible for EnM, suggesting that the departure from normal cell division kinetics seen in polyploid MKs is likely due to alterations in other cell cycle regulators.  相似文献   

5.
Cyclin E   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
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6.
Cellular events must be executed in a certain sequence during the cell division in order to maintain genome integrity and hence ensure a cell's survival. In M phase, for instance, chromosome segregation always precedes mitotic exit (characterized by mitotic kinase inactivation via cyclin destruction); this is then followed by cytokinesis. How do cells impose this strict order? Recent findings in budding yeast have suggested a mechanism whereby partitioning of chromosomes into the daughter cell is a prerequisite for the activation of mitotic exit network (MEN). So far, however, a regulatory scheme that would temporally link the initiation of cytokinesis to the execution of mitotic exit has not been determined. We propose that the requirement of MEN components for cytokinesis, their translocation to the mother–daughter neck and triggering of this translocation by inactivation of the mitotic kinase may be the three crucial elements that render initiation of cytokinesis dependent on mitotic exit. BioEssays 24: 659–666, 2002. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Degradation of the mitotic cyclins is a hallmark of the exit from mitosis. Induction of stable versions of each of the three mitotic cyclins of Drosophila, cyclins A, B, and B3, arrests mitosis with different phenotypes. We tested a recent proposal that the destruction of the different cyclins guides progress through mitosis. RESULTS: Real-time imaging revealed that arrest phenotypes differ because each stable cyclin affects specific mitotic events differently. Stable cyclin A prolonged or blocked chromosome disjunction, leading to metaphase arrest. Stable cyclin B allowed the transition to anaphase, but anaphase A chromosome movements were slowed, anaphase B spindle elongation did not occur, and the monooriented disjoined chromosomes began to oscillate between the spindle poles. Stable cyclin B3 prevented normal spindle maturation and blocked major mitotic exit events such as chromosome decondensation but nonetheless allowed chromosome disjunction, anaphase B, and formation of a cytokinetic furrow, which split the spindle. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that degradation of distinct mitotic cyclins is required to transit specific steps of mitosis: cyclin A degradation facilitates chromosome disjunction, cyclin B destruction is required for anaphase B and cytokinesis and for directional stability of univalent chromosome movements, and cyclin B3 degradation is required for proper spindle reorganization and restoration of the interphase nucleus. We suggest that the schedule of degradation of cyclin A, cyclin B, and then cyclin B3 contributes to the temporal coordination of mitotic events.  相似文献   

8.
Chromosome segregation is under strict control of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). The SAC regulates anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C)-dependent proteolysis of securin and cyclin B. Unattached or misaligned chromosomes trigger SAC-mediated mitotic delay by stabilizing securin and cyclin B due to inhibition of APC/C until the problem is solved. Here we present a hitherto unavailable model facilitating the simultaneous depiction of chromosome movements and pulse-chased cyclin B proteolysis in every single cell within a cell population. During chromosome misalignment, we observed slow cyclin B degradation, which changed to fast degradation once the SAC was satisfied, initiating chromosome separation and mitotic exit. Slow degradation during a SAC-mediated mitotic delay is part of a tightly regulated balance between cyclin B synthesis and degradation. Since chromosomal misalignment is a rare event, the ability to study entire cell populations enabled us to monitor for the first time SAC surveillance in living cells without the need of highly artificial perturbation by spindle poisons.  相似文献   

9.
Cyclin‐dependent kinase (Cdk) both promotes mitotic entry (spindle assembly and anaphase) and inhibits mitotic exit (spindle disassembly and cytokinesis), leading to an elegant quantitative hypothesis that a single cyclin oscillation can function as a ratchet to order these events. This ratchet is at the core of a published ODE model for the yeast cell cycle. However, the ratchet model requires appropriate cyclin dose–response thresholds. Here, we test the inhibition of mitotic exit in budding yeast using graded levels of stable mitotic cyclin (Clb2). In opposition to the ratchet model, stable levels of Clb2 introduced dose‐dependent delays, rather than hard thresholds, that varied by mitotic exit event. The ensuing cell cycle was highly abnormal, suggesting a novel reason for cyclin degradation. Cdc14 phosphatase antagonizes Clb2–Cdk, and Cdc14 is released from inhibitory nucleolar sequestration independently of stable Clb2. Thus, Cdc14/Clb2 balance may be the appropriate variable for mitotic regulation. Although our results are inconsistent with the aforementioned ODE model, revision of the model to allow Cdc14/Clb2 balance to control mitotic exit corrects these discrepancies, providing theoretical support for our conclusions.  相似文献   

10.
Recent findings suggested that the role of cysteine proteases would not be limited to protein degradation in lysosomes but would also play regulatory functions in more specific cell mechanisms. We analyzed here the role of these enzymes in the control of cell cycle during embryogenesis. The addition of the potent cysteine protease inhibitor E64d to newly fertilized sea urchin eggs disrupted cell cycle progression, affecting nuclear as well as cytoplasmic characteristic events. Monitoring BrdU incorporation in E64d treated eggs demonstrated that DNA replication is severely disturbed. Moreover, this drug treatment inhibited male histones degradation, a step that is necessary for sperm chromatin remodeling and precedes the initiation of DNA replication in control eggs. This inhibition likely explains the DNA replication disturbance and suggests that S phase initiation requires cysteine protease activity. In turn, activation of the DNA replication checkpoint could be responsible for the consecutive block of nuclear envelope breakdown (NEB). However, in sea urchin early embryos this checkpoint doesn't control the mitotic cytoplasmic events that are not tightly coupled with NEB. Thus the fact that microtubule spindle is not assembled and cyclin B-cdk1 not activated under E64d treatment more likely rely on a distinct mechanism. Immunofluorescence experiments indicated that centrosome organization was deficient in absence of cysteine protease activity. This potentially accounts for mitotic spindle disruption and for cyclin B mis-localization in E64d treated eggs. We conclude that cysteine proteases are essential to trigger S phase and to promote M phase entry in newly fertilized sea urchin eggs.  相似文献   

11.
In plants after the disassembly of mitotic spindle, a specific cytokinetic structure called the phragmoplast is built, and after cytokinesis, microtubules populate the cell cortex in an organized orientation that determines cell elongation and shape. Here, we show that impaired cyclin B1 degradation, resulting from a mutation within its destruction box, leads to an isodiametric shape of epidermal cells in leaves, stems, and roots and retarded growth of seedlings. Microtubules in these misshaped cells are grossly disorganized, focused around the nucleus, whereas they were entirely missing or abnormally organized along the cell cortex. A high percentage of cells expressing nondestructible cyclin B1 had doubled DNA content as a result of undergoing endomitosis. During anaphase the cytokinesis-specific syntaxin KNOLLE could still localize to the midplane of cell division, whereas NPK1-activating kinesin-like protein 1, a cytokinetic kinesin-related protein, was unable to do so, and instead of the formation of a phragmoplast, the midzone microtubules persisted between the separated nuclei, which eventually fused. In summary, our results show that the timely degradation of mitotic cyclins in plants is required for the reorganization of mitotic microtubules to the phragmoplast and for proper cytokinesis. Subsequently, the presence of nondegradable cyclin B1 leads to a failure in organizing properly the cortical microtubules that determine cell elongation and shape.  相似文献   

12.
Although it is known that in most angiosperms mitosis in early endosperm development is syncytial and synchronized,it is unclear how the synchronization is regulated.We showed previously that APC11,also named ZYG1,in Arabidopsis activates zygote division by interaction and degradation of cyclin B1.Here,we report that the mutation in APC11/ZYG1 led to unsynchronized mitosis and over-accumulation of cyclin B1-GUS in the endosperm.Mutations in two other APC subunits showed similar defects.Transgenic expression of stable cyclin B1 in the endosperm also caused unsynchronized mitosis.Further,downregulation of APC11 generated multi-nucleate somatic cells with unsynchronized mitotic division.Together,our results suggest that APC/C-mediated cyclin B1 degradation is critical for cell cycle synchronization.  相似文献   

13.
The mitotic cyclins promote cell division by binding and activating cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). Each cyclin has a unique pattern of subcellular localization that plays a vital role in regulating cell division. During mitosis, cyclin B1 is known to localize to centrosomes, microtubules, and chromatin. To determine the mechanisms of cyclin B1 localization in M phase, we imaged full-length and mutant versions of human cyclin B1-enhanced green fluorescent protein in live cells by using spinning disk confocal microscopy. In addition to centrosome, microtubule, and chromatin localization, we found that cyclin B1 also localizes to unattached kinetochores after nuclear envelope breakdown. Kinetochore recruitment of cyclin B1 required the kinetochore proteins Hec1 and Mad2, and it was stimulated by microtubule destabilization. Mutagenesis studies revealed that cyclin B1 is recruited to kinetochores through both CDK1-dependent and -independent mechanisms. In contrast, localization of cyclin B1 to chromatin and centrosomes is independent of CDK1 binding. The N-terminal domain of cyclin B1 is necessary and sufficient for chromatin association, whereas centrosome recruitment relies on sequences within the cyclin box. Our data support a role for cyclin B1 function at unattached kinetochores, and they demonstrate that separable and distinct sequence elements target cyclin B1 to kinetochores, chromatin, and centrosomes during mitosis.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Differentiation of trophoblast giant cells in the rodent placenta is accompanied by exit from the mitotic cell cycle and onset of endoreduplication. Commitment to giant cell differentiation is under developmental control, involving down-regulation of Id1 and Id2, concomitant with up-regulation of the basic helix-loop-helix factor Hxt and acquisition of increased adhesiveness. Endoreduplication disrupts the alternation of DNA synthesis and mitosis that maintains euploid DNA content during proliferation. To determine how the mammalian endocycle is regulated, we examined the expression of the cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases during the transition from replication to endoreduplication in the Rcho-1 rat choriocarcinoma cell line. We cultured these cells under conditions that gave relatively synchronous endoreduplication. This allowed us to study the events that occur during the transition from the mitotic cycle to the first endocycle. With giant cell differentiation, the cells switched cyclin D isoform expression from D3 to D1 and altered several checkpoint functions, acquiring a relative insensitivity to DNA-damaging agents and a coincident serum independence. The initiation of S phase during endocycles appeared to involve cycles of synthesis of cyclins E and A, and termination of S was associated with abrupt loss of cyclin A and E. Both cyclins were absent from gap phase cells, suggesting that their degradation may be necessary to allow reinitiation of the endocycle. The arrest of the mitotic cycle at the onset of endoreduplication was associated with a failure to assemble cyclin B/p34cdk1 complexes during the first endocycle. In subsequent endocycles, cyclin B expression was suppressed. Together these data suggest several points at which cell cycle regulation could be targeted to shift cells from a mitotic to an endoreduplicative cycle.  相似文献   

16.
17.
W Liu  J Yin  G Zhao  Y Yun  S Wu  KT Jones  A Lei 《Theriogenology》2012,78(6):1171-1181
During mammalian oocyte maturation, two consecutive meiotic divisions are required to form a haploid gamete. For each meiotic division, oocytes must transfer from metaphase to anaphase, but maturation promoting factor (cyclin-dependent kinase 1/cyclin B1) activity would keep the oocytes at metaphase. Therefore, inactivation of maturation promoting factor is needed to finish the transition and complete both these divisions; this is provided through anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome-dependent degradation of cyclin B1. The objective of this study was to examine meiotic divisions in bovine oocytes after expression of a full length cyclin B1 and a nondegradable N-terminal 87 amino acid deletion, coupled with the fluorochrome Venus, by microinjecting their complementary RNA (cRNA). Overexpression of full-length cyclin B1-Venus inhibited homologue disjunction and first polar body formation in maturing oocytes (control 70% vs. overexpression 16%; P < 0.05). However at the same levels of expression, it did not block second meiotic metaphase and cleavage of eggs after parthenogenetic activation (control: 82% pronuclei and 79% cleaved; overexpression: 91% pronuclei and 89% cleaved). The full length cyclin B1 and a nondegradable N-terminal 87 amino acid deletion caused metaphase arrest in both meiotic divisions, whereas degradation of securin was unaffected. Roscovitine, a potent cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) inhibitor, overcame this metaphase arrest in maturing oocytes at 140 μM, but higher doses (200 μM) were needed to overcome arrest in eggs. In conclusion, because metaphase I (MI) blocked by nondegradable cyclin B1 was distinct from metaphase II (MII) in their different sensitivities to trigger CDK1 inactivation, we concluded that mechanisms of MI arrest differed from MII arrest.  相似文献   

18.
The spindle checkpoint prevents activation of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC/C) until all chromosomes are correctly attached to the mitotic spindle. Early in mitosis, the mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC) inactivates the APC/C by binding the APC/C activating protein CDC20 until the chromosomes are properly aligned and attached to the mitotic spindle, at which point MCC disassembly releases CDC20 to activate the APC/C. Once the APC/C is activated, it targets cyclin B and securin for degradation, and the cell progresses into anaphase. While phosphorylation is known to drive many of the events during the checkpoint, the precise molecular mechanisms regulating spindle checkpoint maintenance and inactivation are still poorly understood. We sought to determine the role of mitotic phosphatases during the spindle checkpoint. To address this question, we treated spindle checkpoint-arrested cells with various phosphatase inhibitors and examined the effect on the MCC and APC/C activation. Using this approach we found that 2 phosphatase inhibitors, calyculin A and okadaic acid (1 μM), caused MCC dissociation and APC/C activation leading to cyclin A and B degradation in spindle checkpoint-arrested cells. Although the cells were able to degrade cyclin B, they did not exit mitosis as evidenced by high levels of Cdk1 substrate phosphorylation and chromosome condensation. Our results provide the first evidence that phosphatases are essential for maintenance of the MCC during operation of the spindle checkpoint.  相似文献   

19.
The master regulators of the cell cycle are cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks), which influence the function of a myriad of proteins via phosphorylation. Mitotic Cdk1 is activated by A-type, as well as B1- and B2-type, cyclins. However, the role of a third, conserved cyclin B family member, cyclin B3, is less well defined. Here, we show that Caenorhabditis elegans CYB-3 has essential and distinct functions from cyclin B1 and B2 in the early embryo. CYB-3 is required for the timely execution of a number of cell cycle events including completion of the MII meiotic division of the oocyte nucleus, pronuclear migration, centrosome maturation, mitotic chromosome condensation and congression, and, most strikingly, progression through the metaphase-to-anaphase transition. Our experiments reveal that the extended metaphase delay in CYB-3-depleted embryos is dependent on an intact spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) and results in salient defects in the architecture of holocentric metaphase chromosomes. Furthermore, genetically increasing or decreasing dynein activity results in the respective suppression or enhancement of CYB-3-dependent defects in cell cycle progression. Altogether, these data reveal that CYB-3 plays a unique, essential role in the cell cycle including promoting mitotic dynein functionality and alleviation of a SAC-dependent block in anaphase chromosome segregation.  相似文献   

20.
Groisman I  Huang YS  Mendez R  Cao Q  Theurkauf W  Richter JD 《Cell》2000,103(3):435-447
In Xenopus development, the expression of several maternal mRNAs is regulated by cytoplasmic polyadenylation. CPEB and maskin, two factors that control polyadenylation-induced translation are present on the mitotic apparatus of animal pole blastomeres in embryos. Cyclin B1 protein and mRNA, whose translation is regulated by polyadenylation, are colocalized with CPEB and maskin. CPEB interacts with microtubules and is involved in the localization of cyclin B1 mRNA to the mitotic apparatus. Agents that disrupt polyadenylation-induced translation inhibit cell division and promote spindle and centrosome defects in injected embryos. Two of these agents inhibit the synthesis of cyclin B1 protein and one, which has little effect on this process, disrupts the localization of cyclin B1 mRNA and protein. These data suggest that CPEB-regulated mRNA translation is important for the integrity of the mitotic apparatus and for cell division.  相似文献   

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